Guerrero v. Norita

1 N. Mar. I. Commw. 929
CourtNorthern Mariana Islands Commonwealth Trial Court
DecidedMarch 1, 1984
DocketCIVIL ACTION NO. 82-108
StatusPublished

This text of 1 N. Mar. I. Commw. 929 (Guerrero v. Norita) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Northern Mariana Islands Commonwealth Trial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guerrero v. Norita, 1 N. Mar. I. Commw. 929 (cnmitrialct 1984).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Ai .issue in this matter is the ownership of a 20,000 square meter parcel within an area known as Agricultural -Homestead No. 229. A brief history and reference to several documents is necessary for the resolution of this matter.

[931]*931BACKGROUND

Some time prior to February, 1968, Antonio X. Rogolofoi (Rogolofoi) applied for and received a homestead permit for a 46,207 square meter parcel in the Capitol Hill area on Saipan. The homestead is known as A.H. 329.

On February 13, 1968, Rogolofoi executed a "Deed of Sale" to defendant Juan Q. Norita (Norita) which document is in evidence as Plaintiff's Exhibit 2. The deed purported to convey 20,000 square meters of A.H. 329 to the grantee. On June 30, 1969 the government quitclaimed the property known as A.H. 329 to Antonio T.. Rogolofoi after he had complied with the homestead requirements.

On December 23, 1970 Norita executed a "Deed of Sale" transferring 9,000 square meters of the 20,000 square meters to defendant Masuo Kyota (Kyota).

On December 28, 1970 Norita executed a "Deed of Sale" transferring 4,000 square meters of the 20,000 square meters to defendants Martha E. and Eusebio Rechucher (Rechucher).

On January 8, 1971 Norita executed a "Deed of Sale" transferring to defendant Rosemary Kendall (Kendall) 40,000 square feet of the 20,000 square meter parcel.

These three deeds are in evidence as Plaintiff's Exhibits 3, 4, and 5, respectively.

From around 1968 to the present, the plaintiff, his brother, Pedro Guerrero, and their families have fenced, used or farmed A.H. 329 and none of the defendants have possessed, farmed or used the property.

[932]*932Antonio T. Rogolofoi died approximately in 1970 and was survived by Carmen Rogolofoi, his spouse. On January 7, 1981 a Determination of Ownership was issued by the Land Commission finding title in A.H. 329 to be in Herman R. Guerrero subject to the Norita, Rechucher, Kyota and Kendall deeds. Said Determination of Ownership is Plaintiff's Exhibit 1.

This suit was filed in 1982 by plaintiff and essentially asks that the court rule that the Rogolofoi to Norita deed is void for several reasons set forth in paragraph 7 of the complaint. Should this deed be void then all subsequent conveyances of Norita would be ineffective.

DISCUSSION

The plaintiff has advanced five grounds for declaring the February, 1968 deed of Rogolofoi to Norita void:

a. There is no particular description of the land conveyed to defendant Norita;

b. The purported transfer took place prior to the time that Antonio T. Rogolofoi received title to the agricultural homestead;

c. That Carmen T. Rogolofoi possessed at least an undivided one half interest in said homestead and did not transfer said interest other than to plaintiff herein;

d. That no consideration passed for said transfer from defendant Norita to Antonio T. Rogolofoi.

[933]*933e. That at the time of the purported transfer, Antonio T. Rogolofoi was so intoxicated with alcoholic beverages that he did not know what he was transferring to defendant Norita.

For purposes of discussion, these grounds will be taken in reverse order.

FIRST, the court rules there is no basis upon which to find that Rogolofoi was so intoxicated on February 13, 1968 that he did not know what he was transferring. There is evidence he was an alcoholic but in so far as his actions in signing the February 13, 1968 deed, the evidence is that he was competent to execute the deed.

SECOND, the evidence is clear that Norita paid $600 to Rogolofoi as and for the consideration for the deed and there was no failure to pay the amount specified in the deed.

THIRD, even if Carmen Rogolofoi possessed an undivided on.e-half interest, Rogolofoi could transfer his one-half interest. Since the 20,000 square meters is less than one half of the entire parcel, there was no impediment to the purported transfer. There is no evidence to support the finding that Rogolofoi was prohibited from transferring his one-half interest - if that is what he had. Of course, if he owned the property outright as his own homestead, . no difficulty pertains to the transfer. Thus, this assertion does not provide plaintiff a basis for relief.

FOURTH, plaintiff's claim that the Rogolofoi to Norita deed is void because it preceded the quitclaim deed from the [934]*934government has already been ruled upon by the court. Both the doctrine of after acquired t.itle and the case of Sablan v Norita, 7 TTR 90 (High Court Tr. Div. 1974) disposes of this allegation.

Finally, the court turns to the description of the land in the Rogolofoi to Norita deed. Since the court finds the deed itself is determinative in this matter a copy is attached hereto as Appendix "A". In conjunction vith the deed, Plaintiff's Exhibit 6 and Defendant's Exhibit A must be considered.

At the outset the court acknowledges several basic rules to be used in approaching•the question of whether the description of the property in the deed is too uncertain or vague to allow the deed to stand and convey an interest in property.

As a general rule, it can be stated that the courts are liberal in construing a description in a deed so that if there is a way to sufficiently determine and identify the land, the instrument will be operative as a conveyance. 23 AmJur 2d, Deeds. §222 p.265 et seq. This attitude of liberality has ■progressed from prior times when more exactitude was demanded by the courts. Consequently, the instances of courts entertaining and using' extrinsic evidence to "fill the gap," so to speak, have increased in scope. See generally, 23 AmJur 2d, Deeds, §249, p.285 et seq.

In following these general rules at trial in this matter, the court permitted the defendant Norita to introduce oral and written (Defendant's Exhibit A) evidence to explain the terms of the deed.

[935]*935After reviewing the testimony, exhibits, and in particular Plaintiff's Exhibit 2, and after viewing the property, the court concludes that, try as it might, it cannot clarify or determine the intent of Rogolofoi, the grantor, as to what 20,000 square meter parcel was to be transferred to Norita.

From reading the deed itself, it is impossible to determine the location of the parcel to be transferred. The only definitive description in the deed is that of A.H. 329. It is known that it contained 46,207 square meters and that Norita was to get 20,000 square meters. But which part? The only possible clue in the deed is found at two places. In the first paragraph it states that it is "... a part or portion of parcel of land ..., situated adjacent to the road leading up to Uailes (Wireless) at Donni (Army Hill) in Saipan, Mariana Islands.".

In the last full paragraph, it is stated that the 20,000 square meters will be ”... from the above described premises situated adjacent to the road."

In both instances it . is difficult to determine if the grantor is saying that all of A.H. 329 is adjacent to the road or whether the parcel deeded to Norita is to be adjacent to the road. However, for the purposes of the resolution of this matter, it will be presumed that Rogolofoi intended to give Norita land adjacent to the road.

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Bluebook (online)
1 N. Mar. I. Commw. 929, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guerrero-v-norita-cnmitrialct-1984.